Fine...I'll find eleven other girls and make a 'Babes for Bush' calendar...
Just some more of my two cents:
We get a lot of our information from the far right and the far left, be it moveon.org or newsmax.com (which is only useful for the late-night jokes anyways). These people see it as 'their way or the highway'. To them, a liberal must be a pro-choice, atheist, communist. A conservative must be a Bible-thumpering, anti-envorimental, facists.
Now really, do any of us fit into to either of those catergories? No. I don't. Most Americans do not follow their 'traditional' party line. What would your political impression of me be if you asked what I thought about homosexual unions and drug legalization? On the other side of the coin, what would happen if you asked me about abortion or taxes? The thing is, I might disagree with those wacky far-right people, but I feel like I represent the GOP, not them. I think I understand what the GOP stands for. But does my version of a conservative get media coverage? Nope. And the same thing happens on the liberal side. I'm sure the liberals not hogging the spotlight have souls.
That all being said, those same loudmouths on each extreme side hate each other. They always will. Now I may disagree with Bush (like this new thing cooking up about the immigration), but I like him. I find him likable. Clinton? He's tolerable. I'll admit he did a few good things, I'm sure he's great at parties, but I wouldn't go near the man. Like I've said before, maybe if I were a man, this wouldn't be an issue. I don't feel malicious towards any of the democratic candidates.
Hate becomes a problem when it forces you to discredit everything a person does. I think both sides have done it, however, I take no part in it.
"You're either lying or stupid." "I'm stupid! I'm stupid!" Megatron and Starscream